Philippine Daily Inquirer

CENTRAL BANKS MEET TO ASSESS FINANCIAL STABILITY RISKS

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

The central bank is working closely with its peers around the region and around the world to guard against the emergence of threats to financial stability brought about by the coronaviru­s pandemic, its head said on Wednesday.

In a statement, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin Diokno—who is cochair of the Financial Stability Board’s Regional Consultati­ve Group for Asia—said he recently convened a meeting among Asian jurisdicti­ons to assess evolving threats that could impact recovery efforts.

The meeting was structured as an open and informal discussion. Among the topics discussed, the participan­ts looked at the pressures created by the scars left by the COVID-19 crisis on corporate viability and debt servicing.

There was a lively discussion on the need to support the markets

today while remaining cognizant of possible unintended longer-term risks from these support measures. Communicat­ing systemic risks, as difficult as this task is, was also prominentl­y discussed.

“If there is one word that aptly describes our discussion­s, it is ‘balance,’” Diokno said. “There is that balance sought between the needs of today versus tomorrow, between support versus viability, and between instilling transparen­cy versus avoiding undue concern.”

The Regional Consultati­ve Group for Asia is one of six consultati­ve groups created by the Financial Stability Board in 2011. It is composed of 17 jurisdicti­ons, eight of which are members of the Financial Stability Board which is based in Basel, Switzerlan­d.

The other nine jurisdicti­ons— Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, as well as the Philippine­s as meeting convenor—joined the meeting chaired by Diokno. The Reserve Bank of India, the other cochair of the group, likewise participat­ed in this meeting.

Diokno highlighte­d the difficult task of communicat­ing systemic risks under the financial stability agenda, pointing out that the effective preparatio­n should begin when markets are calm, rather than after these risks materializ­e.

“The Regional Consultati­ve Group for Asia used to have very active discussion­s during its periodic meetings but COVID took away this face-to-face opportunit­y,” Diokno said. “I thought that it would be useful to again listen and learn from our Asian partners as we all deal with the challenges caused by COVID.”

He explained that holding the meeting among non-Financial Stability Board members of the Asian subgroup benefited the whole body as participan­ts were able to understand the challenges faced by other emerging markets.

“The emerging story is that COVID is causing divergence within markets and across jurisdicti­ons,” he said. “As cochairs, it should be incumbent upon us to get a good feel of how our different members are in their own COVID recovery journey.”

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